Quantifying variations in shortwave aerosol–cloud–radiation interactions using local meteorology and cloud state constraints
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Published:2019-05-13
Issue:9
Volume:19
Page:6251-6268
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Douglas Alyson, L'Ecuyer TristanORCID
Abstract
Abstract. While many studies have tried to quantify the sign and the magnitude of the
warm marine cloud response to aerosol loading, both remain uncertain, owing to
the multitude of factors that modulate microphysical and thermodynamic
processes within the cloud. Constraining aerosol–cloud interactions using the
local meteorology and cloud liquid water may offer a way to account for
covarying influences, potentially increasing our confidence in observational
estimates of warm cloud indirect effects. A total of 4 years of collocated satellite
observations from the NASA A-Train constellation, combined with reanalysis
from MERRA-2, are used to partition marine warm clouds into regimes based on
stability, the free atmospheric relative humidity, and liquid water path.
Organizing the sizable number of satellite observations into regimes is shown
to minimize the covariance between the environment or liquid water path and
the indirect effect. Controlling for local meteorology and cloud state
mitigates artificial signals and reveals substantial variance in both the
sign and magnitude of the cloud radiative response, including regions where
clouds become systematically darker with increased aerosol concentration in
dry, unstable environments. A darkening effect is evident even under the most
stringent of constraints. These results suggest it is not meaningful to
report a single global sensitivity of cloud radiative effect to aerosol. To
the contrary, we find the sensitivity can range from −0.46 to
0.11 Wm−2 ln(AI)−1 regionally.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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